Mickledore

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Mickledore is a narrow ridge, 840 metre high, connecting the mountains of Scafell and Scafell Pike in the English Lake District. It is also a pass between the valleys of Wasdale and Eskdale. The name means great door or pass. The ridge is easily reached and traversed from Scafell Pike to the north, or from the valleys to the east and west. However, access to the summit of Scafell is barred by the rockface of Broad Stand, which looks much easier to climb than it is.

Broad Stand

Broad Stand is a steep buttress wall requiring sequential bouldering moves, which have been described as anything from scrambling to rock climbing. It is described as 'extremely dangerous' by Wasdale Mountain Rescue Team, and the climb is "Difficult" in the British grading system. In descent, the cliff is even more dangerous. The poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge probably made a descent of Broad Stand on 5 August 1802; he wrote: The historian and outdoor enthusiast W. G. Collingwood wrote in his classic guide book The Lake Counties: ". . .'Indeed, it stands up with pinnacles and buttresses so high, and flanking precipice's so deep, and even in places overhanging, that here, if anywhere in these mountains, one can get the impression of size and awesomeness. . .Right in front of Mickledore ridge the blocky volcanic-ash formation cleaves into a set of gigantic steps, as it were tilted from behind, so that the top of each step slopes outwards, and what should be vertical overhangs. . .That is the Broad Stand. .."

Route to Scafell

The walker seeking a safe route between England's highest mountains must go via Foxes Tarn, which involves a descent to 680 metre or so below the height of the ridge. The more challenging routes of Lord's Rake, and the West Wall Traverse, offer alternative ways to reach Scafell.

Route to Scafell via Foxes Tarn

From the Mickledore ridge it is necessary to descend on the south side to pick up the path to Foxes Tarn. Older OS maps show the path junction near the confluence of two streams at about 680m, however later maps show the path junction lower down at about 650m. It is possible that the old path has been replaced with a newer one.

History

The Mickledore mountain rescue stretcher box was airlifted to the site by the Royal Air Force Mountain Rescue Service in 1974.

Sources

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